送交者: LoyalReader 于 July 31, 2002 19:13:36:
回答: Interesting but ... 由 morningstar 于 July 31, 2002 15:12:13:
Throughout human history, science has certainly produced powerful results and benefits, but science is simply not enough because it doesn't tell us what we really want to know the most - why anything happens.
Back to our little subject. We all know there are universal laws governing the vast open space of some 15 billion light years across, perfectly, delicately, and very much in favor of life. How could the universal laws work so well omnipresently in such a magnificent mindboggling scope? To go a bit further, out of the chaos of the Big Bang, why there would be existing any law at all in the first place?
Science has no answer to that. In fact, science has no answer to anything if the question is "why it happens?"
Talking about quantum mechanics, Physicist John Bell once said:
"The founding fathers of quantum mechanics rather prided themselves on giving up the idea of explanation. They were very proud that they dealt only with phenomena: they refused to look behind the phenomena, regarding that as the price one had to pay for coming to terms with nature. And it is a fact of history that the people who took that agnostic attitude toeards the real world on the microphysical level were very successful. At the time it was a good thing to do. But I don't believe it will be so indifinitely."
It cannot work that way indifinitely. So there come the talks about a super designer of the universe - not having much to do with the religion world, but rather to engage in the mission of truly coming to terms with the universe.
Science does not rule the nature. The master of the nature is the force who made the laws, whatever that might be.